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There
are various reasons. But a big one is this: The federal government
turned home ownership into an affirmative-action program, complete with
quotas. And a lot of people who had no business buying houses bought
them and then lost them.
"As sad as it is to say, this began in the Clinton Administration as a
response to the argument that the poor and minorities couldn't get
credit and were being left out of the home-ownership dream," says James Wright, a sociology professor at
University of Central Florida.
"They couldn't meet credit requirements. There was a lot of pressure in
progressive circles" to change those requirements.
[Full]
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Holy Crap! Orlando
Sentinal columnist Mike Thomas comes closeer to articulating the truth
about this as I've seen in print.
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To
further this goal, Fannie Mae agreed to buy high-risk subprime loans in
1999. This meant lenders could sell the loans to unqualified buyers and
then dump them on Fannie and the taxpayers.
The Department of Housing and Urban Development set a goal that, by
2001, half the portfolios of Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae should be
composed of loans to low-income and moderate-income buyers.
Once Freddie and Fannie were fully engaged in the subprime business,
the market went crazy. Lenders enticed unqualified and unsophisticated
borrowers into signing loans they couldn't possibly pay off.
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I'll take small victories where I can find them.
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